I was pleasantly surprised by 'Prizes', having shelved the book in my collection for a while but always passing it over for something newer or more of a thriller. Segal's 'Doctors' was a book I read over 30 years ago as a teenager working at a hospital, and it must have been good enough for me to choose 'Prizes' years later, though I don't remember the specifics of 'Doctors' other than that they are likely completely independent works. In 'Prizes', Segal tells the stories of 3 genius scientists in their quest to win a Nobel Prize, each with a fascinating story that led them to their breakthroughs. Sandy Raven is a Hollywood producer's son, looking to make a name for himself outside the Sidney Raven shadow, but with one eye still behind what, or more importantly, who. he left behind in Hollywood. Isabel is a child prodigy, nurtured by her scientist father until her knowledge far exceeds even his, but simultaneously suppressed by Dad to explore any of her other passions and torn between her love for him and science and a desire to grow beyond what he can provide. Adam is a junior scientist mentored by his idol, Max, well on his way to a Nobel Prize of his own, but when Max's life is cut short, Adam is left with giant shoes to fill and takes it upon himself to dedicate himself to Max's most private but important line of research in hope of making Max and his widow, Liesl, proud.
Because the book was published in 1995, the groundbreaking research projects undertaken by each scientist that are figments of the author's imagination don't seem so far from the reality of things we see in the science world today, decades later. It's not a bad thing, just something to keep in context, that the problems at the heart of the research may very well have been solved in the past 30 years, or have taken a direction that makes Segal's scientists' lines of thinking incorrect. I loved the personal backstories that wound themselves into the parts about science and made the 3 protagonists human and relatable.